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We're not about global connection, we're about local engagement.

Sneak Peek of the Table's iPhone App

Posted by Kevin D. Hendricks on 28 February 2011 |

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Our next bi-weekly Round Table webinar will offer a sneak preview of our new iPhone app. It just moved out of the design phase and into development, and we want to show it off.

Here are a few screenshots of the app fresh from the designer. On Wednesday we'll walk through the app in more detail.

Tune in on Wednesday, March 2 at 3 p.m. CST. Register now.

We offer the bi-weekly Round Table every other Wednesday to show off new features, answer questions and help you get the most out of the Table. This will be our first webinar since going public, so we're excited to throw the doors open and welcome new folks to the Table.

 

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The Table Is Not International, Yet

Posted by Kevin D. Hendricks on 25 February 2011 |

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Update: The Table is now available internationally.

To all the eager folks outside the U.S. hoping for a place at the Table, we're sorry to say that the Table is not currently available internationally.

We're blown away by the interest and look forward to the day when we can invite everyone around the world to the Table.

We know that's a bummer to the many non-U.S. churches who wanted to sign up. Unfortunately, there are several technical, legal and insurance hurdles we need to overcome to make that happen. We hope to be able to resolve those issues later this year and begin to make the Table available at no cost to countries around the world. Of course, we have to prioritize our efforts, and right now we're focused on improving the Table in the U.S.

But we will get there and hope you'll be patient with us. One step at a time.

We'll Let You Know
If you'd like to help us out, fill out this quick form and we can track demand by country and reach out to you in the future when we prepare to launch outside the U.S.

Thanks for your understanding.

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The Table Goes Public

Posted by Kevin D. Hendricks on 24 February 2011 |

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Yesterday the Table launched publicly to U.S churches. We had over 400 churches sign up on the first day alone. Wow.

Here's a glimpse of churches using the Table around the country:

Map of churches across the U.S. using the Table.

We've got all but four states represented. C'mon, Montana, North Dakota, Wyoming and Hawaii: We've got a seat waiting for you.

We're grateful for the response and eager to see churches pull up a chair and discover how the Table can help. While it's so encouraging to see all those churches, this isn't about big numbers. It's about creating conversation and community. That won't happen in a day, but we're thrilled to see the potential.

It's been a long journey and getting to our public launch is quite a milestone. But we're not the type to throw a big party and toot our own horn. We've got a lot of work to do. We're answering questions and fixing bugs and helping people figure out how the Table can work for their church. We're also working on new features, making the Table bigger and better as we go.

Thanks for checking us out. And we hope you will pull up a chair. Because the Table is our gift to the church. It's completely free with no monthly fees, limits or boundaries. That's the way community should be.

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Why The Table Isn't Just a Christian Version of Facebook

Posted by Ken Finsaas, Jason Wenell and Josh Lewis on 9 February 2011 |

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One of the biggest challenges we face is helping people to understand the difference between The Table and Facebook. Some of our detractors say people don't need another social network. They claim people might look around for awhile, but they'll soon head back to Facebook, and never return to The Table.

Now that we have thousands of real users using The Table in their churches, we're happy to report that concern is baseless. Our users are actually using The Table more and more as time goes on. For example, one church which launched in early December and now has over 1,200 people on their Table has seen prayer frequency on their Prayer Wall rise 45% between the end of December and today.

It is important to note that many of these same users that are returning over and over to The Table are adept in social media, having been long-time Facebook users. They continue to use Facebook, and they use it well. But they also feel the Table brings a whole new dimension to their church community.

Before we begin, we want it to be clear that we don't intend to insult Facebook in making these comparisons. Everyone in our office regularly uses and enjoys Facebook. We've all received real, personal value from their platform, they fill a particular need very well, and we're thankful for their pioneering work. When we say we're not trying to compete with or replace Facebook, it's not just lip service. We really mean it. They've done their job well.

Having said that, there are at least three profound differences between The Table and Facebook that we think really matter to the people who use The Table.

The Three Big Differences

  1. The fact that The Table is designed for "us" instead of "me" is a fundamental shift from the traditional social media mindset.
  2. The Table's atmosphere of privacy and intimacy causes different behaviors to arise that are not seen elsewhere online.
  3. The fact that The Table is designed specifically for the church directs what we create and helps us to define "success" differently.

Let's examine each of these in depth.

"Us" instead of "Me"

The first profound difference between The Table and Facebook is that Facebook is designed to be "me-centric" and The Table is designed to be "us-centric." We began our designs by centering around the shared space of the church ("us") rather than the isolated space of the individual ("me"). 

You're probably friends on Facebook with a few people from your church, but not all the people from your church. What that means is that all those people to whom you're not connected would never know if you've tried to post a prayer request to your Facebook Wall. And since they don't know you've posted that information, they can't use that opportunity to get to know you and serve you. They probably wouldn't even think to come find you on Facebook unless they met you in person. And if they did seek you out on Facebook before meeting you in person, it might even be considered a "creepy" thing to do.

By contrast, on The Table, people can choose to share new content (like a prayer request, discussion board topic, or a photo) with the whole church. Sharing information church-wide allows new introductions to strangers within your church to happen easily. And every time you meet a stranger on The Table, you know you have something in common with them already. You'll probably see them face-to-face in the foyer next Sunday. That's a powerful difference.

Two more great examples of The Table's "us-centric" design are our People Directory and Groups Directory. Discovering new people and groups at your church can't be done well on Facebook. Using Facebook to search for groups at your church (or even searching for your church itself) often leads to matches from other churches all over the world, and it's not clear which item in the search is the one you're looking for. In some cases, that problem causes multiple instances of the same Facebook group to be created, accidentally fracturing the community.

Let's say you were searching for your chuch's page on Facebook, in order to get to know other church members there. Once you finally found the right church, all the people who "like" that church on Facebook are listed as a single summed total (e.g. "1,832 People Like This") and you can only see six of those people at a time. That means meeting new people who go to your church via that church page on Facebook is a nearly-impossible chore.

The Table makes it easy. Every person in the church and every group visible to the whole church are all listed out in a convenient, searchable interface. No mistaken results from other churches. Every search result is immediately more relevant.

A Private Platform

The second profound difference is that on Facebook, everyone in the world is in the same giant, open room. Comments you make (depending on your account settings) could be seen by hundreds of millions of people. Furthermore, Facebook is growing more open at every turn. That's not a mistake on their part; a piece of their stated mission is to "make the world more open and connected."

By contrast, The Table is a comparatively closed system where the people in each church don't see and interact with everyone in every other church. That difference is not at all about being "safer" online when using The Table. It's about creating a space where intimacy, accountability, honesty and personal openness can happen. It's like the difference between sharing a highly vulnerable prayer request with your church family vs. sharing that same highly vulnerable prayer request on the microphone at your high school reunion. Those are very different groups of people, and there's a different purpose for each of them.

Designed for the Church

The third profound difference between Facebook and The Table is that Facebook's core functionality is made for 1-on-1 personal connections with acquaintances and friends, and personal "broadcasting." The Table's core functionality is made to allow people within the church to "live church together." Specifically, that means our built-in apps help people to live out a Christ-centered, gospel-centered life in the context of their church community.

How do our apps accomplish that lofty task? We'll give two examples.

First, we designed a Prayer Wall specifically to post and display prayer requests (including anonymous prayer requests!) from anyone and everyone in the church. It's certainly possible to post prayer requests to your church's Facebook page, but you'll notice very few people do it because it's awkward, overly-public, and it can't be anonymous when it needs to be. You might think people would be just as shy on their church's Table, but that's not what we've seen. In the last few months we've seen prayer requests by people expressing some of the most difficult emotions a person can experience. Calls for help that are only for the church's ears. We've seen stories of miracles and of God's work that are celebrated throughout the church. And through all this, connections are made between people that would have never happened otherwise. This kind of vulnerable sharing allows people go deeper in each others' lives in wonderfully sweet ways that strip away the facade of our Sunday morning silence.

Secondly, our upcoming Serve app is being built to match each person's giftedness and resources to real needs in their church. That idea wouldn't usually make sense outside the context of a local, physical community. The Facebook community is too global and too fractured to be used effectively or efficiently for that purpose. That's not a criticism of Facebook, it's just not what Facebook was created to be. That's why we don't agree when people see The Table and say our plan must be to "transfer behavior" from Facebook to The Table. These are behaviors that don't exist on Facebook. They can't be transferred because they weren't there to begin with.

Churches have suggested to us that the best thing about The Table is that it's not centered on what the church staff or leadership are doing or getting involved with. It's centered on the church being the church. It's centered on the community supporting each other through connection, prayer and service.

So, will non-social types come in droves to the Table? Will people actually find themselves drawn to physical community through this product? When a church experiences the kind of caring and considerate embrace that we’ve seen on The Table in recent months, the answer has been an unmistakable "yes."

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